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Friday, 26 February 2016

Mmmm, yummy

Another week, another 52 Christmas Card Throwdown Challenge. I'm not getting much time to craft at the moment, but doing this challenge means I make at least one card a week. This time it's a Christmas Baking theme. I had no idea what design to do, but I knew straight away I wanted to use an idea I saw on TV last year - mixing spices with embossing powder so your card smells Christmassy! It's a bit wasted on a blog, but hopefully the final recipient of the card will get the benefit, and it makes me happy.Having been through my dies, stamps and papers, I had no images that would work for this challenge, so I had to start from scratch. I folded some copier paper in half and started to draw gingerbread man shapes - it took a few iterations to get one I was happy with.

I drew round my template onto kraft card, and cut it out.

Time to make up the special embossing powder! It turns out we don't have allspice or powdered cloves (or ground ginger), so I stuck with cinnamon. I mixed it with metallic copper, then tried embossing with it. I had to reduce the proportion of cinnamon - I started with nearly a quarter of the mix as spice, but that didn't emboss well, so I added more embossing powder to make it about an eighth cinnamon.I covered the gingerbread shape in natural pigment ink (I found that worked better than watermark ink, which soaked in), and embossed it.

The finish is a bit gritty compared to normal, but looks quite realistic for gingerbread (if gingerbread was shiny!)Next to decorate the gingerbread man. I'd thought of using white embossing powder and a versa mark pen, but didn't think that would work over the existing embossing. Instead, I dug out some white outline relief paste. I used to do a lot of glass painting; I haven't done any for ages but still have the materials. Using the paste is often compared to piping icing, so I thought it should do the job nicely.

I don't know about you, but I'm pretty impressed with how realistic this looks!I used black and red little gems for the eyes and buttons.The only food related item I had in my stash was a candy cane stamp, so I thought I'd use that as well, it'd go nicely with the feel of the card.I tried it two ways - I stamped it on white in red pigment ink, and heat embossed with clear powder, and also stamped in white on red card, and embossed in white.

I preferred the ones on red, until I cut them out.

Now it's the red on white that I think looks better, so we'll go with those.I cut a mount in white and another, larger one in kraft card, to fit on a 6x6 card base. They look a little plain though, so I got out the harlequin stencil from Clarity, to add a little interest to the background. It's quite a simple pattern which I think works with the simple style of the gingerbread man and canes.I used a stencil brush to add fired brick distress ink to the white mount, and brushed corduroy to the kraft card.

I also got this pice of waste paper, which I think looks great, so I'll save that for the stash.

I went round the edge of the white mount with a red sharpie and a ruler. I edged the kraft card after I mounted it onto the card base, by drawing outside the edge in a red pen.I used foam tape for the gingerbread man and the white mount, and tiny foam pads cut in half for the candy canes.

About Me

I've been crafting and creating for as long as I can remember - as a child, we never threw a cardboard box away, they were all transformed into some kind of creation.
Now, my main creative interests are papercraft and knitting, although I dabble in many other crafts as the mood or inspiration takes me.